Abstract

Background and objectiveMismatch between invasive mechanical ventilation and the requirements of patients results in patient-ventilator asynchrony (PVA), which is associated with a series of adverse clinical outcomes. Although the efficiency of the available approaches for automatically detecting various types of PVA from the ventilator waveforms is unsatisfactory, the feasibility of powerful deep learning approaches in addressing this problem has not been investigated. MethodsWe propose a 2-layer long short-term memory (LSTM) network to detect two most frequently encountered types of PVA, namely, double triggering (DT) and ineffective inspiratory effort during expiration (IEE), on two datasets. The performance of the networks is evaluated first using cross-validation on the combined dataset, and then using a cross testing scheme, in which the LSTM networks are established on one dataset and tested on the other. ResultsCompared with the reported rule-based algorithms and the machine learning models, the proposed 2-layer LSTM network exhibits the best overall performance, with the F1 scores of 0.983 and 0.979 for DT and IEE detection, respectively, on the combined dataset. Furthermore, it outperforms the other approaches in cross testing. ConclusionsThe findings suggest that LSTM is an excellent technique for accurate recognition of PVA in clinics. Such a technique can help detect and correct PVA for a better patient ventilator interaction.

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